Great story Alan...  I wish I had come to the hobby sooner. I get a little
jealous when I hear you guys were able to get some of the great titles for
a trade or a few bucks! When it comes to posters... I think we all go a
little mad sometimes! - GT

On Mon, Apr 13, 2020 at 5:36 PM Alan Adler <[email protected]> wrote:

> Howdy -
>
> Put me down for 1957 and a poster from I WAS A TEENAGE WEREWOLF begged
> from Bob White, the manager of the Sunset Theater in Asheboro, North
> Carolina.
>
> The amazing thing is that posters were trash back then - only worth
> pennies - the price of manufacture and rental to NSS - but just plan
> disposable other than that - time and changing culture has made them art.
>
> Maybe in New York or LA old paper had some small bankable charm in the old
> days - but growing up in a small town in North Carolina - I was nothing
> more than a pest digging trough trash cans for garbage.
>
> My father supported my habit - he loved movies and helped me appreciate
> the art of the posters despite the lack of dollar value - He also
> understood the touchstone the posters were for further enjoyment of the
> film.
>
> I’d find a room full of posters and my father would rent a U-haul and hire
> a couple guys to dig them out so I could bring them home.
>
> But in those days - where I lived - most people thought I was just plain
> not right in the head (many still do) - but there was an odd aloneness to a
> hobby that no one else practiced or understood.
>
> After ten years of collecting, one day when I was in my early 20’s on a
> trip to DC I walked past a small poster store.
>
> The first one I’d ever seen or heard of.
>
> I did a double-take and almost fainted.
>
> In that single moment I realized there were other people out there that
> saw value in old movie posters, too.
>
> And I was no longer alone.
>
> I was vindicated.
>
> I went in the store and had everything they had.
>
> If only there’d been a Dracula or two I could have gotten them for a few
> bucks.
>
> But the line from Treasure of Sierra Madre sums of my feelings for those
> days.
>
> “Thanks, mountain!” I say.
>
> The movie poster gods have been good to me - and I’ve been grateful for a
> lifetime.
>
> At 71, I still sort and file nearly every day.
>
> And thanks to a bad memory, every time I open a box I have the thrill of
> finding something I forgot I had!
>
> Alan
>
>
>
> On Apr 13, 2020, at 5:08 PM, Susan Heim <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Great question Glenn..  I know I have customers who started collecting the
> the 1950's.  I have one customer who's father was good friends with someone
> who ran a National Screen Service and, on weekends, they would drop
> by to see the friend and the friend would give my customer, who was about
> 10 or 11 in those days movie posters and lobby card sets.  So, for any
> given film, and he particularly collected Elizabeth Taylor and Alfred
> Hitchcock,
> he owned the one sheet, 40x60, 30x40 and lobby card set for each of their
> films, all in mint, never used condition.  My customer kept up with the
> friend over the years, and developed other film poster interests all the
> way back to the 1920's, and collected hundreds of posters. It's really
> amazing to hold in your hands a mint copy of something that is 60 or 90
> years old when you go to frame it......
>
> I know Ron Borst started collecting pretty early.....when I first started
> collecting back in 1973, I knew other collectors that had been collecting
> since the 1940's finding posters in old bookstores in Hollywood.
>
> Sue
> Hollywood Poster Frames
>
> ------------------------------
> *From:* MoPo List <[email protected]> on behalf of Glenn
> Taranto <[email protected]>
> *Sent:* Monday, April 13, 2020 11:59 PM
> *To:* [email protected] <[email protected]>
> *Subject:* [MOPO] Has anyone ever wonder this...?
>
> Hello All -
>
> OK, Admittedly too much time on my hands...
>
> Have any of you ever wondered (or know) who is considered the earliest
> know poster collector?  Forry Ackerman, perhaps?
>
> I can just imagine some kid standing in front of a Paramount theatre and
> staring at a Metropolis one sheet wishing they could own it.
>
> GT
>
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